No, but later this weekend I may enjoy some adult beverages - close
enough? :)

________________________________

From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Howard Richter
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 12:15 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: OT: Medical Terminology


** 
William,
 
Are you pharmaceutically gifted and if so can you share?

hbr



 
On 6/5/08, Will Du Chene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        ** 

        Darn it... Coffee on the keyboard and out the nostrils...
Bill!!!

        I cannot stop chuckling... 

        I took a First Responder course a couple of semesters ago.
Endotracheal intubation, MUH, FDGB, CATS, and transoccipital implants
otherwise known as lead overdose syndrome was covered in depth. Good
thing that I did not know about the "PVC Challenge" otherwise I can
almost guarantee that I would have bombed my practicals. 

         

            Thu Jun 05 2008 10:45:24 AM CDT from William Rentfrow to
[email protected]
            Subject: OT: Medical Terminology 
        
        
            **
            This is a real memo to Emergency Medical Services staff that
was read by
            Michael Feldman on NPR:
        
            According to the records from several emergency rooms, many
EMS narratives
            have taken a decidedly creative direction.
        
            "Effective immediately, all EMS workers are to refrain from
using slang or
            abbreviations to describe patients.
        
            For example, cardiac patients should not be referred to with
MUH (messed-up
            heart), PBS (pretty bad shape), PCL (pre-code looking), or
HIBGIA (had it
            before; got it again).
        
            Stroke patients are not "Charlie carrots," nor are workers
to use CCFCCP
            (cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs) to describe patients mental state.
        
            Trauma patients are not CATS (cut all to shit), FDGB (fall
down--go boom),
            TBC (total body crunch), or "hamburger helper."
        
            Similarly, descriptions of a car crash should not include
phrases such as
            "negative vehicle to vehicle interface" or "terminal
deceleration syndrome."
        
            HAZMAT teams are highly trained professionals, not "glow
worms.
        
            Persons with altered mental states as a result of drug use
are not
            considered
            "pharmaceutically gifted."
        
            Gunshot wounds to the head are not "transoccipital
implants."
        
            The homeless are not "urban outdoorsmen," and endotracheal
intubation should
            not be called a "PVC challenge."
        
            Do not refer to terminal or recently deceased patients as
"paws up," ART
            (assuming room temperature), CC (cancel Christmas), CTD
(circling the
            drain),
            or NLPR (no long-playing records).
        
            I hope you all join me in respecting the diversity of our
clients by using
            proper medical terminology in your narratives and log
entries.
            ----------------------------------
            William Rentfrow, Principal Consultant
            [EMAIL PROTECTED]
            C 701-306-6157
            O 952-432-0227
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-- 
Howard Richter
Red Hat Certified Technician
CompTIA Linux+ Certified
ITIL Foundation Certified 
E-Mail = [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Resume = http://www.richter-home.net/resume/
LinkedIn Profile = http://www.linkedin.com/in/hbr4270
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